A new species of Dinotoperla Tillyard, 1921 from the Shoalhaven Catchment, New South Wales, Australia (Plecoptera: Gripopterygidae)
Author
Theischinger, Gunther
Author
Mynott, Julia H.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-01-25
4550
3
423
427
journal article
27472
10.11646/zootaxa.4550.3.9
7070edc8-3ef3-4cc8-8bc4-03f9735e23dc
1175-5326
2625554
CD614014-43B5-4C11-A374-562D438AE90E
Dinotoperla cherylae
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 2–5
,
8–10
)
A rather small
Dinotoperla
species, the male with a rather inconspicuous colour pattern on the head and thorax, and the terminalia similar to
D. uniformis
and
D. evansi
Kimmins
, 1 951 but paraprocts slenderer and epiproct not bowed and with distinct gap between the apical and subapical tooth.
Holotype
.
♂
,
Australia
,
New South Wales
,
Shoalhaven Catchment
,
Upper Kangaroo River
,
34.672998
o
S
/
150.601391
o
E
,
14-Dec-2017
),
G. Theischinger
&
J. Martin
, DcKaV; in
Australian Museum
;
GenBank
:
MK
142266
.
Paratypes
.
2 ♀♀
,
3 larvae
, same data as holotype
;
1 ♂
,
Kangaroo River
@
Upper Kangaroo
,
3-Oct-2017
, collector unknown, DcKV;
GenBank
accession number:
MK
142265
.
1 ♂
,
New South
Wales
,
Shoalhaven Catchment
,
Sugarloaf Creek
off
Misty Mountain
Rd,
35.56305
o
S
/
150.00996
o
E
,
1-Oct-2017
),
Z. Billingham
&
G. Theischinger
; all in
Australian Museum
;
2 larvae
,
Gloucester River
at
Gloucester Tops
campground,
32.0582
o
S
/
151.6841
o
E
,
20-Nov-2012
,
J. Mynott
&
D. Black
; in
Australian National Insect Collection
ANIC
0 8 0 0 1805 (JMH1462,
GenBank
:
KY078101
) and
ANIC
0 8 0 0 1806 (JMH1658,
GenBank
:
KY078116
)
.
Etymology.
The specific epithet is the genitive of the Latinized name Cheryl, representing a dedication to Cheryl Tang who brought this species to the attention of the senior author.
Description of the
holotype
.
Measurements (mm). Body 5.0; forewing 7.2; antennae 7.0.
Head.
Dorsally and antennae largely greyish brown, otherwise yellowish grey.
Thorax.
Dorsally and laterally largely greyish brown, ventrally yellowish grey to greyish brown; pronotum anteriorly and medially, prescutum of meso- and metanotum and a thin mid-line of mesonotum dull to greyish yellow. Legs largely greyish yellow to pale yellowish brown, apical portion of femora, and basal portion of tibiae markedly darker, up to brownish black.
Wings.
Faintly suffused with pale greyish; squarish darker blotches around most cross-veins, particularly in apical half of forewing.
Abdomen.
Very pale greyish brown. Terminalia with central sclerite of tergite X short with tip rounded, sclerotized, not produced into a membranous cone; epiproct simple, rather straight, with distinct gap between the more acutely pointed larger apical and a shorter, less acutely pointed subapical tooth; paraprocts with base wide and lobe narrow, largely almost parallel sided; cerci 10–11 segmented, the basal segment almost twice as long as wide, the next two segments shorter than wide and the remaining segments slightly longer than wide to up to four times as long as wide.
Variability.
The
paratype
males closely agree with the
holotype
. Their forewings measure between 7.0 and
7.5 mm
.
Description of female.
Head, thorax, wing
and
abdomen.
Much as in male. Terminalia with subgenital plate (of immature specimens) evenly rounded; paraproct lobe narrowly trapezoidal with rounded tip; posterior margin of segment X widely and evenly rounded.
FIGURE 1.
Neighbour-joining tree of COI5’ fragment using Tamura-Nei model of evolution, pairwise deletion, homogeneous lineage and 2000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates. Values below 75 are not shown on tree.
Measurements (mm). Body 4.0–5.0; forewing 8.4–8.6.
Larva.
The larva is described in detail and keyed out in
Mynott
et al
. (2017)
, only key characters are given as follows:
From mainland eastern
Australia
; wingpads developed or developing; pronotum with hind corners not produced; meso- and metanotum without tubercles or mid-dorsal hump; dense and obvious fringe of setae not on all margins of pronotum; hind margin of tergite X with fringe of obvious long robust setae; tergite surfaces and/or hind margins with scattered or medially restricted long robust setae; dorsal colour light brown to pale; tergite X with pale patches near off-centre hind margin.
Figs. 8–10
show larval details of a mature female larva from the
type
locality
FIGURES 2–7.
Dinotoperla
spp., ♂: (2–5)
D. cherylae
sp. nov.
: (2) habitus (hind wings shrivelled); (3, 4) terminalia, lateral, two different specimens; (5) tip of abdomen, dorsal; (6, 7) terminalia, lateral, from Theischinger & Cardale (1987): (6)
D. evansi
Kimmins
; (7)
D. uniformis
Kimmins.
FIGURES 8–10.
Dinotoperla cherylae
sp. nov.
,
mature female larva.
Affinities and diagnosis.
Dinotoperla cherylae
(
Figs. 1–4
),
D. evansi
Kimmins, 1951
(
Fig. 5
), known only from southeastern
South Australia
and
D. uniformis
(
Fig. 6
), ranging from southeastern
Queensland
across eastern
New South Wales
to
Victoria
, are the only three
Dinotoperla
species known that do not have the male central sclerite of tergite X produced into a membranous cone. The male of
D. cherylae
can be distinguished from both above similar congeners by the markedly slimmer lobe of the paraprocts and by the rather straight epiproct with distinct gap between the more acutely pointed larger apical and the shorter, less acutely pointed subapical tooth versus a strongly bowed epiproct with apical and subapical tooth very close to each other in both
D. uniformis
and
D. evansi
.
Habitat and distribution.
The available material of
D. cherylae
was collected from the bank of boulder dominated riffles in eastern New South
Wales
, where the species is now known between latitudes 30
o
S and
35.6
o
S
. At the
type
locality
D. cherylae
was found to coexist with
D. dolichoprocta
Theischinger, 1982
.